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The Acadian from 1962 to 1969 was based on the contemporary Chevrolet Chevy II (Nova). Beaumonts were sold at Pontiac-Buick Dealers primarily for the Canadian market, but were also made and sold in some countries outside of North America. In 1962, the Acadian was offered in two models with either base Invader or deluxe Beaumont series.
To promote automobile manufacturing in Canada, the APTA (also known as the "Auto Pact") in the 1960s had provisions prohibiting sales of certain United States-made cars. . General Motors responded by offering certain makes of cars manufactured in Canada primarily for the Canadian market such as Acadian, and Beaumont, which started as an offering in the Acadian line, but later became its own ...
Acadian (1962–1971) AC Cobra MkI (1962-1963) AMC Ambassador (1962) Buick Wildcat (1962) (Invicta subseries) Checker Aerobus (1962–1977) Chevrolet Corvette C2 (1962-1967) Chrysler 300H (1962) Chrysler 300 (non-letter series) (1962–1964) Dodge 330 (1962–1964) Dodge 440 (1962–1964) Dodge Dart (1962-1966) Envoy FB (1962-1964) Ford ...
This is a list of vehicles that have been considered to be the result of badge engineering (), cloning, platform sharing, joint ventures between different car manufacturing companies, captive imports, or simply the practice of selling the same or similar cars in different markets (or even side-by-side in the same market) under different marques or model nameplates.
Beaumont (автомобиль) Metadata This file contains additional information, probably added from the digital camera or scanner used to create or digitize it.
2017: 2017–present Cadillac XT5; 2017–2023 GMC Acadia; 2018–2020 Holden Acadia; 2018–2024 Buick Enclave; 2018–present Chevrolet Traverse; 2019–present Chevrolet Blazer; 2020–present Cadillac XT6; A crossover-focused derivative of the E2XX platform. [7] 2017 Vauxhall Insignia. E2XX: FWD/AWD: 2016: 2016–present Chevrolet Malibu ...
The General Motors X platform (also called X-body) is a rear-wheel drive compact car automobile platform produced from the 1962 to 1979 model years. Developed by Chevrolet, the architecture was initially unique in the U.S. to the Chevy II, first joined by the Pontiac Ventura in 1971, then a range of other GM products as its divisions expanded their compact model lines.
Royale Series First generation (1975–1978) based on Opel Rekord D Second generation (1980–1991) based on Opel Rekord E, variants : Automatic, Diesel, Duke, Prince, Salon, Salon Super and XQ Nissan -based models